It is a risk. I didn't mean to strike fear into people's hearts, but it is a risk because of the historically unprecedented transition we've seen in U.S. energy production. Normally speaking, you think of energy systems as evolving remarkably slowly. They take decades to unfold. Your planning horizons are very long. It was only seven years ago that the United States was trying to get approvals for importing liquid natural gas, because they believed they were going to be running out. Now, of course, they're trying to figure out how to get export approvals for natural gas, because there's a glut that has natural gas at unsustainably low prices.
If Canada stays tied to the United States by the aptly described umbilical to the southwest, there is a danger that certainly we'll miss the U.S. market; that is, we'll be caught unexpectedly by the declining U.S. consumption needs and not have time...or we'd have to ramp up very quickly our access to other markets. If somehow the access to other markets is stifled and progress continues in the United States the way it has on oil and gas production, then I think there is a serious threat of Canada missing the boat and not realizing the profit potential of western Canadian energy resources.